Pinky Barda, gram panchayat mukhiya in Jharkhand, on the stress, isolation, and quiet solidarity that define the lives of women in villages impacted by migration.

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This is the ninth article in a 19-part series produced in collaboration with The Wellbeing Project. A three-year initiative supported by the Shibulal Family Philanthropic Initiative and EdelGive Foundation, it will explore the pathways and challenges to individual and organisational well-being through contributions from funders, practitioners, leaders, and researchers.

View the entire series here.


In Jharkhand, 89.6 percent of labour migrants are men. The farming season lasts six months. After that, there is little work, so they migrate in the hope of an increased income. And the women stay back to look after the household.

They manage repairs, children’s education, medicines for the elderly, and take decisions that were never theirs to make alone. They carry a constant sense of worry. They navigate community scrutiny every time they step outside the house. And they do all of this without any formal support, because no government programme is designed for them.

Research shows that wives of migrants in India consistently rate their own health lower than that of wives of non-migrants. The effect is linked to irregular remittances, broken communication, and extended separation.

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In this video, Pinky Barda, mukhiya of Kuju Gram Panchayat, Seraikela Kharsawan, speaks about what this weight feels like, and how the women in her panchayat rely on one another.

Know more

  • Read more about the mental health impact of labour migration on families in India.
  • Explore IDR’s Gender Watch series.
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ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Pinky Barda-Image
Pinky Barda

Pinky Barda is the mukhiya of Kuju Gram Panchayat located in the Rajnagar block of Seraikela Kharsawan district, Jharkhand. Her duties as mukhiya include managing local infrastructure, overseeing public welfare programmes, and ensuring grassroots development.

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